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Developing a Questionnaire. Goals . Discuss asking the right questions in the right way as part of an epidemiologic study. Review the steps for creating a questionnaire and the categories of information typically collected.
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Goals • Discuss asking the right questions in the right way as part of an epidemiologic study. • Review the steps for creating a questionnaire and the categories of information typically collected. • Review types of questions and how to properly organize them into a questionnaire.
Steps in creating a questionnaire • Identify the leading hypotheses about the source of the problem • Identify the information needed to test the hypotheses • Identify the information needed for logistics of the study and to examine confounding
Steps in creating a questionnaire • Write the questions to collect this information • Organize the questions into questionnaire format • Test the questionnaire • Revise the questionnaire • Train interviewers to administer the questionnaire
Categories of information for an epidemiologic questionnaire • Identifying information • Demographic information • Clinical information • Exposure or risk factor information • Source of information
Identifying information • Important for the logistics of the study • Includes • Respondent's name or other identifiers • Contact information: address and telephone number • Allows • Subject identification • Questionnaire updates as more information becomes available • Linkage of questionnaire to other records • Prevention of duplicate entry of records
Demographic information • Includes items such as age, sex, education level, and location • Is used to characterize the population at risk • Is important in the search of potential confounders • Needs to be evaluated to determine if it affects the relationship between exposure and disease
Clinical information • Includes • Signs and symptoms of disease • Date of onset of illness • Results of laboratory testing • Allows • To characterize the illness • To decide who has the outcome of interest • To chart the time course of the problem
Exposure or risk factor information • Is used to test the hypotheses under investigation • Is probably the major focus of the questionnaire • Should be specific to the problem under investigation • Often includes: • The respondent’s exposure to the factor of interest • The route, amount, and timing of exposure and other details of exposure (e.g., brand, distributor)
Source of the information • Identifies the individual supplying the information • Helps to assess validity • Is the interviewee the study subject or a surrogate? • Identifies the interviewer • Helps to correct problems • Unanswered questions, illegible handwriting, nonsensical responses, inadequately trained interviewers
Types of questions • Open-ended • Fill-in-the-blank • Closed-ended • Categorical responses • Ordinal responses
Types of questions • Open-ended • Do not provide response choices, therefore possible responses are limitless • Are useful in characterizing attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors • Are usually limited to hypothesis-generating activities
Types of questions • Fill-in-the-blank • Do not provide response choices • Require short responses (one or two words) • Are used to measure a simple respondent attribute, collect a date, or quantification • Require categorization and coding of responses
Types of questions • Closed-ended • Response choices are provided • Categorical responses: categories have no particular order or inherent numerical value with respect to one another • Ordinal responses: responses describe a range of choices and have a quantitative values with respect to each other.
Types of questions • Closed-ended • Investigator must • Anticipate likely responses • Present the responses as a list of mutually exclusive choices • State responses clearly and concisely
Selecting the type of question • Depends on: • The kind of information you need • Your expectations about that information • During early exploration, when you know little about a problem, you will be more likely to use open-ended questions • As you learn more about the problem and can anticipate responses, you will be more likely to use closed-ended questions
Writing questions • Wording depends on: • Knowledge of the problem • Hypothesis being tested • Information being collected • Affected population
Wording of questions • Use language respondents can understand • Test translated questionnaires with native speakers and “backtranslate” to test the translation • Limit each question to a single idea • Word each question as precisely as possible
Wording of questions • Do not phrase questions in a way that suggests a response • Avoid double negatives • Always include a “Don’t know” or “Refused” category option • In closed-ended questions, be sure that categories cover all potential responses and are mutually exclusive
Questionnaire design • Introduction • Identify the sponsoring organization • Explain the purpose of the study • State how long the interview is likely to take and reassure the participant that their answers are confidential
Questionnaire design • Length • As short and focused on the hypothesis being tested as possible • Try to gather additional information of interest to the investigators without compromising parsimony • Logic • Organize questions in a way that promotes rapport between respondent and interviewer • Do not skip from topic to topic; the questionnaire should appear logically organized
Questionnaire design • Layout • Clearly state instructions • Number questions and pages • Include an identifying code for the respondent on each page • Separate responses from questions • Include skip patterns • Ending statements • Thank the respondent • Provide contact information
Conclusions • The first step in questionnaire development is to frame and refine the hypotheses under study and decide what information is needed to test the hypotheses. Then design the questionnaire paying careful attention to the type of question used, wording and organization.
Reference University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Public Health,Department of Maternal and Child Health (2003). Data Skills Online: AMaternal and Child Health Toolbox. "Designing Questionnaires."http://www.sph.unc.edu/toolbox/